?Part I: Background and Assessment of Cancer Pain
1History and Epidemiology of Cancer Pain
2Cancer Pain Syndromes
3Cancer Treatment-Related Pain
4Cancer Pain Management: A European perspective
5Pain in the Cancer Survivor
Part II: Pharmacologic Therapies
6Opioid therapy in cancer pain
7Opioid related side effects and management
8Clinical implications of opioid therapy
9Non-Opioid Analgesics and Emerging Therapies
Part III: Interventional and Locoregional Therapies
10Palliative Radiation for Cancer Pain Management
11Ablation Techniques in Cancer Pain
12Interventional Treatments for Cancer Pain
13Peripheral nerve entrapments
14Intrathecal Analgesia in Cancer Pain
15Neurosurgical Treatments for Cancer Pain
Part IV: Total Pain and Rehabilitation
16Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
17Psychosocial Aspects of Cancer Pain
18Integrative Therapies in Cancer Pain
Andrew Leitner, MD, is an assistant clinical professor at City of Hope National Medical Center, in the departments of Supportive Care Medicine and Anesthesiology. He is board certified in anesthesiology and interventional pain management and is involved in local and national organizations to advance the practice and science of pain management for cancer patients. Dr. Leitner received his medical degree from Washington University in St. Louis, followed by a residency and fellowship at UCLA. His research interests are in postoperative pain, methodology in symptom management, and emerging modalities for pain control. His area of clinical focus is the management of acute and chronic cancer pain.
Christine Chang, MD, is a board-certified expert in interventional pain management and psychiatry. She received her medical degree from the University of Colorado and then completed a psychiatry residency at Mount Sinai Hospital and an interventional pain medicine fellowship at Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California. She earned her acupuncturist license from the State University of New York. Her research interests are in the fields of cancer rehabilitation, chemotherapy-induced neuropathy, and integrative and complementary medicine for pain and psychiatric conditions. She currently works as a consultant for the NFL and for Traditions Behavioral Health programs and her clinical focus is on populations with complex trauma based pain and psychiatric disease.